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Rebalancing, contract rolls frame weekly changes in CCA, RGGI holdings
California industrial carbon allowance allocations tick up for 2023
Gold Standard cites “unjustifiable” UK offsetting claims for new coal mine
COMMENT: Sweep’s climate tech & business predictions for 2023
Senior Program Officer, Carbon, GGGI – Vientiane
French bank launches exchange-traded commodity contract to track EU carbon
Canada meets pledge to end international fossil fuel subsidies
Euro Markets: EUAs slip but still notch 3.1% weekly gain despite ‘fragility’
EU approves funding for cross-border energy infrastructure, including CCS
UPDATE – RGGI Q4 auction clears at lowest level since last September
Marine life hit by ‘perfect storm’ as red list reveals species close to extinction
Unsustainable human activity putting dugongs, abalone shellfish and pillar coral at risk of disappearing, says latest IUCN update
Illegal and unsustainable fishing, fossil fuel exploration, the climate crisis and disease are pushing marine species to the brink of extinction, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) red list, with populations of dugongs, abalone shellfish and pillar coral at risk of disappearing for ever.
Marine life is facing a “perfect storm” of human overconsumption, threatening the survival of some of the world’s most expensive seafood, according to the conservation organisation, which publishes the most up-to-date information on the health of wildlife populations on Earth.
Continue reading...Biodiversity: 'Magical marine species' pushed toward extinction
Government to weaken water pollution goals in ‘attack on nature’
Exclusive: Despite demands from water campaigners, there will be no overall target for river health
Water pollution goals are to be weakened by the government next week, the Guardian can reveal, as Environment Act targets will give farmers three extra years to reduce their waste dumping into waterways.
River campaigners have said the news is proof the government has not dropped its “attack on nature”.
Continue reading...Lizard Downs in Cornwall protected for public use after 140 years
Open Spaces Society secures re-registration of 116 hectares of ‘splendid’ moorland’ for common use
More than 100 hectares of some of the most stunning landscape in west Cornwall has finally been recognised as common land, protecting it for the public 140 years after it was threatened with enclosure.
Lizard Downs was authorised for enclosure – the act of taking ownership of common land – in 1880 but the proposed fencing off never happened.
Continue reading...Chester zoo hails birth of rare Malayan tapir as ‘important moment’
Female calf named Nessa will help efforts to protect species, of which fewer than 2,500 remain in the wild
An endangered Malayan tapir has been born at a UK zoo, in what the zoo said was an “important moment” for conservation.
The female calf, which zookeepers have named Nessa, was born weighing 9kg on Wednesday at Chester zoo, one of only two places in the country to keep tapirs, a species related to the horse and the rhinoceros.
Continue reading...Avian flu has led to the killing of 140m farmed birds since last October
Culls and compensation have cost hundreds of millions of pounds in the US, UK and Europe, with current outbreak predicted to worsen
More than 140 million birds have died and hundreds of millions of pounds have been spent in the past year in the US, UK and EU in tackling bird flu, as some experts said continual culling was “morally” wrong.
With an international agreement on the use of vaccinations likely to be one or two years away, the situation will probably worsen this winter as outbreaks of bird flu continue to rise.
Continue reading...Ratings agency warns cookstove project has additionality risks
The US is a rogue state leading the world towards ecological collapse | George Monbiot
It’s not just indifference. It’s an active, and deadly, cavalier attitude towards the lives of others: an example other nations follow
There are two extraordinary facts about the convention on biological diversity, whose members are meeting in Montreal now to discuss the global ecological crisis. The first is that, of the world’s 198 states, 196 are party to it. The second is the identity of those that aren’t. Take a guess. North Korea? Russia? Wrong. Both ratified the convention years ago. One is the Holy See (the Vatican). The other is the United States of America.
This is one of several major international treaties the US has refused to ratify. Among the others are crucial instruments such as the Rome statute on international crimes, the treaties banning cluster bombs and landmines, the convention on discrimination against women, the Basel convention on hazardous waste, the convention on the law of the sea, the nuclear test ban treaty, the employment policy convention and the convention on the rights of persons with disabilities.
Continue reading...UK farmers ripping up unaffordable orchards, NFU president says
Experts call for schemes to help fruit growers keep trees and preserve habitats vital for biodiversity
Farmers are ripping up orchards because they are unable to afford to keep them, the president of the National Farmers’ Union (NFU) has said, in a major blow for biodiversity.
The increasing cost of labour and spiralling energy costs have meant fruit growers are removing trees from their land, Minette Batters said.
Continue reading...